Abstract

Study design: A thematic review.Objectives: To evaluate if physical activity enhances muscle strength, improves balance, and reduces the fall frequency and the fracture incidence.Background: One of the major medical problems of today is the increasing incidence of fragility fractures. Muscle strength and fall is one of the major determinants of a fracture. If physical activity could increase muscle strength, improve balance and reduce the fall frequency, then training could be recommended as prevention for fractures.Methods: The review used Medline (Pub Med) and the search words exercise, physical activity, muscle strength, balance, falls, fractures. Randomized controlled trials (RCT) were predominantly included, although this not is a systematic review.Results: The evidence that physical activity modifies the risk factors for fall is compelling, although RCT with fractures as end point are lacking. Physical activity is associated with improved muscle strength, co-ordination and balance. Physical training increases muscle strength also in octogenarians by up to 200%, i.e. a much more pronounced effect than the corresponding increase in muscle volume or bone mass. There is also evidence that physical activity decreases the actual number of falls. Observational cohort and case-control studies imply that physical activity is associated with reduced hip fracture risk. If exercise reduces the number of vertebral fractures and other fragility fractures are less evaluated.Conclusions: Physical activity in older ages can be recommended to improve muscle strength and balance, to reduce the risk to fall and fractures, although the highest level of evidence – RCT with fracture as endpoint – is lacking.

Highlights

  • This review evaluates existing data in the literature, to verify or oppose the hypothesis that physical exercise affects nonskeletal risk factors for fractures such as muscle mass, muscle strength, balance and fall frequency, and if physical activity is associated with reduced fracture incidence

  • The muscle strength in the quadriceps muscle improved by 29% and the sway of the body was reduced by 6%, while the bone mass (BM) was unchanged during the intervention year

  • Low to moderate physical activity during 16 weeks of physical training was associated with a 30Á100% increase in muscle strength in both men and women while the BM at best increased by 3% [24]

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Summary

Objectives

To evaluate if physical activity enhances muscle strength, improves balance, and reduces the fall frequency and the fracture incidence

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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